| iliyana nedkova on Sun, 23 Aug 1998 13:35:35 +0000 |
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| Syndicate: wro97 text for JUNCTION reader |
dear all,
just occured to me that only a handful of syndicalists have been at the
wro97 conference. the unpublished as yet text below is a slightly re-worked
version of my paper which picks up on the central theme of wro97: GEO/INFO
TERRITORY.
with vr greetings,
-illie
GEO/INFO TERRITORY
FROM THE POINT OF VIEW OF A
NOWHERE WOMAN IN A NOWHERE LAND
He is a real nowhere man, sitting in his nowhere land,
making all his nowhere plans for nobody.
Doesn't have a point of view,
knows no where he's going to.
Isn't he a bit like you and me?
Nowhere Man, please listen.
You don't know what you are missing.
Nowhere Man, the world is at your command.
He's as blind as he can be.
Just sees what he wants to see.
Nowhere Man, can you see me at all?
Nowhere Man - No worry.
Take your time - No hurry.
Leave it all to somebody else...
On my way from Liverpool via Sofia to Wroclaw it occurred to me that
instead of cracking an opening joke for you I would rather play this
popular Beatles tune which could somehow frame my talk about the
nowhere man in the rigid boundaries of a well-defined land space - that
of Liverpool. Moreover that in my talk I would like to explore the
notion of nomadism and rootlessness underlying the current electronic
arts discourse. Therefore I couldn't help picking a fixed geographical
point of reference as Liverpool, in the far North West of England, a
city which is already stereotyped as the birthplace of Beatles and on
the way to be cliched in the mainstream cultural map as the birthplace
of Video Positive Festival or http://www.fact.co.uk/VP97.htm - one the
equivalents of WRO97 as media art bieannales.
This is how I found myself Liverpool-bound for about six months so
far, initiating, coordinating and delivering a two-day conference,
called LEAF97 - Liverpool East European Electronic Arts Forum as an
integral part of Video Positive Festival as well as growing obssessed
with the notion of the virtual revolutions. Actually it was exactly two
years ago when I made my first research trip to Video Postive95 and
ever since I got involved with digital arts activism. Ever since I am
learning to exult both in the blessing and the curse of belonging to
what feels like a whole new race of transcontinental tribe of
wanderers, of privileged homeless. It is a tribe, as Salman Rushdie
says `of people who root themselves in ideas rather than places, people
who have been obliged to define themselves-because they are so defined
by others-by their otherness.'
Gradually I realised that I started to learn how to define relations in
non-familial ways. I even started to like and appreciate foreignness.
It was only recently when I realised that all these habits of mind and
life would scarecely have been imaginable in my parents' youth; that
the very facts and facilities that shape my world are all distinctly
new developments (although we sometimes tend to put only new labels to
old wine bottles) , and mark me as a modern peculiar type. But
apparently to be a nowhere man or a nowhere woman is not exclusive to
our turbulent decade of the 1990s, presuposedly because of being on the
exodus of the millenium. It was a common concern in the 1960s as the
Beatles song goes. It was only recently, in fact, when I realised that
I am an example of an entirely new breed of people that is multiplying
as fast as the international telephone lines and frequent flyer
programmes. We pass through countries as through revolving doors. More
and more we find ourselves as resident aliens of the world, impermanent
residents of nowhere. Nothing is strange to us, and nowhere is foreign.
We are visitors even in our own homes. This is not, I think a function
of affluence so much as of circumstance. I am not, that is, a
jet-setter pursuing gorgeous vacations from Hawaii to Mauritius; I am a
product of a movable sensebility, living and working in a world that is
itself increasingly small and increasingly mongrel. I am a
multinational soul on a multi-cultural globe dealing with multi-media.
Am I a multi-being?
Taking planes seems as natural to me as picking up the phone, or as
e-mailng avidly around, or as searching through internet, or as going
to conferences; I fold up my self and carry it around with me as if it
were an overnight case. The modern world seems increasingly made for
people like me. I can plop myself down anywhere and find myself in the
same relation of familiarity and strangeness: Wroclaw is scarecely more
strange to me than the foreigners' England to which I was drawn to and
the frequently visited Sofia that people tell me is my home. Another
sign of the times: the leading American artist, Joseph Neshvatal, has a
New York postal address, a web site in Germany and an e-mail address in
France and is currently being reported to be in Ireland. I can fly from
London to Sydney (wish to, at least) and feel myself no more a
foreigner in one place or another; all of them are just
locations-pavilions in some intercontinental Festival - and I can work
or live or laugh in any of them. Nearly all have direct dialphones,
internet access, CNN, DHL, Xerox. All have sushi, Thai restaurants and
KFC.
My office is as close as the nearest modem or fax machine. This kind of
life offers an unprecedented sense of freedom and mobility: tied down
nowhere we can pick and choose among locations if we can ignore the
problems of visas, living standards and cost regulations for a
daydreaming moment. Ours is the first generation that can go off to
Tibet or Chisinau, Moldova for a week to find our roots - or to find
out that they are not there. At a superficial level, this new
internationalism means that I can meet in a Wroclaw coffe shop or more
likely called an internet/cyberia cafe, an Australian netartist like
Stelarc who is as conversant as I am with body issues, Liverpool
Football Club and Spice Girls. At a deeper level, it means that I need
never feel estranged. If all the world is alien to us, all the world is
home.
Unsurprisingly and pertinently there is a growing number of media art
festivals entirely focused on the issues of estrangement and remapping
of territories. A couple of them have made their mission statement
prominent in their topical titles, namely Rootless & Ostranenie. They
are both constructed around the notions of possession and
dis-enfranchisement, location and dis-location, centre and periphery,
authonomy and marginalisation, nationalism and regionalism, the
individual and the collective. They are both manifesting their common
concern in their mottos. Rootless, established by HTBA, an artists-run
collective based in Hull, England has appropriated the motto of `Lo
Straniero' Journal which reads: `The ignorant are tied to their native
land, the mediocre consider themselves citizens of the world, but only
the wise realise that they are strangers [i.e. nowhere people]
everywhere'. Furthermore The ROOT Festival which has self-acknowledged
itself as one of Europe's foremost programmes of international
performance, live art, film and video and new media installation, has
metamorphosied in 1997 as ROOTless Festival of international nomads. As
if the festival or the root itself has lost its confortable and
time-based identity and prides itself of this loss. A new identity is
being coined and there is a properly planned eventful launch of the
Nomad Territories identity card as part of ROOTless. The Co-consul of
the Nomads Roddy Hunter is currently busy researching these ancient yet
new mode of thinking and living. And I'm really anxious to hear more &
experience his findings. You can also follow the developments promptly
on http://www/htba.demon.co.uk.
Ostranenie [http://www.ostranenie.org] also seems to be much-talked
about festival of live and
new media art not in the least because of its debatable ethymological
nature. The question of what exactly ostranenie means and how it
relates to Viktor Sklovskij's formalist notion was raised again at
LEAF97. It was Stephen Kovats, Ostranenie coordinator, who advocated on
the interpretation of the term as estrangement.'For me estrangement
unites both making strange and de-familiarisation while setting
ostranenie on its own as an analysis of the condition of post Cold War
Europe.'[Stephen Kovats, LEAF talk, April 97, see LEAF within
http://www.fact.co.uk/VP97.htm ] The first so-called world war that
provided the context of the initial term seemingly comes to its
resolution only now. After two periods of re-adjustment marked
predominantly by yet another hot war (which has doomed the first one
and its millions of dead to oblivion) and a pathetically exhausting for
all `blockies'cold war, the context of further investigation of
ostranenie has emerged as the transformation of a society as observed
by the influence of the electronic image upon this society. The current
condition of Eastern and Central Europe (as well as the west) is one of
the `the estrangement of familiar structures which require
recalibration with a desired but somewhat de-contextualised foreign
model.' [S.K, as above]
Perhaps it could be argued that the overall conceptual framework of
LEAF97 could be summed as a hope/belief that the cardinal points as a
political provider of identity largely begun to be eliminated, such
that eventually East, West, North and South may return to their
geographical homes. Perhaps we have reached the level of insight and
understanding which allows the mechanisms of exchange to work properly.
The time has now come to reverse the direction of introspection and
initiate media art events in the East which examines the change and the
cultural transformation of an ever more confused West. Isn't WRO97 a
reminder of that?
LEAF97 however comes neatly within the symbolism of the number two as
if playing further with the handy dichotomy east/west:
:: a two-day event with a massive number of speakers -some 45 from
about 20 countries and as much audience, both local [UK-based] and
international.
:: a two-purpose driven event in terms of its current & future agenda
and aspirations: firstly aimed at Syndicate/V2-East Network members,
being the core of the `leaves' yet open to the public as a show-case;
secondly as a paving event for ISEA98, Liverpool & Manchester by
exploring the same topic of Revolution.
:: two major concepts underlying the talks: firstly - around recent
EastEuropean revolutions with explicit yet soft political undertones
secondly - around east/west, as overpoliticized notions, as
misconceptions and prejudices, asremapping of territories, as new
borderlines.
:: two distinct manners of 40 blitz presentations:ones with with
theoretical touch and others like practical reviews and reports + two
closing performance at the end of each day.
:: two facets of the format: blocks of talks with 3 panelists followed
by pointed discussions afterwards.
:: two moderators - Lisa Haskel & Andreas Broeckmann.
:: two extra meetings were held alongside LEAF: a successful one of the
Syndicate/V2-East Network and a failed one - a Face Setting lunch of
women art practitioners.
:: two special EastEuropean highlights within Video Positive97: private
view @68 Hope Street Gallery featuring Luchezar Boyadjiev, Sofia - the
only EastEuropean installation project within the exhibition series of
Video Positive 97 and Virtual Revolutions Screenings - an hour of
selected shortvideoworks from Eastern and Central Europe focusing the
issues of gender, identity, re-writing of history.
:: yet more than two rather four socializing events with four nights of
complimentary drinks in the major night clubs and bars in both
Liverpool and Manchester.
:: and finally more than four months of dedicated leafing/e-mailing
around with more than 60 invitees at LEAF + initiation, promotion,
curation, find-raising, logistics, documentation, publication, crisis
management and perhaps much more.
It also can't be denied that LEAF97 has elided many unpalatable
possibilities of what it terms the `digital revolution' and its impact
in the virtually transformed Europe of the 1990s. I have deliberately
shifted it to the notion of Virtual Revolutions [VR] which refers both
to the influx of new technologies and the nearly transformed Europe. I
have personnally never been fond of the buzzphrase `digital
revolution', a feeling shared by many in Europe, where the word
`revolution' carries an ambiguity, an aura of violence, fanatism and
chaos which seems to be absent in the romantic American memories of
their founding moment. Just a brief sidelook which could run a parallel
with the split identity of Wired Magazine. For instance copies of Wired
US boast of its millenarian qualities and its promise of total
transcendence of current social realities which definitely don't square
with the uneasy world in which most people feel themselves to be
living.
With all my reservations, though I will still be working for the
digital arts in the nowhere land of tomorrow, because I still believe
that information technology and the subtle control systems can have
immensely positive, liberating effects, not just for some `angelic
info-elite' but throughout societies at all economic level. Networks
that don't require a centralised authority to function, which
facilitate the creation of communities and movements in spaces where
traditional entities based on ethnicity, class and geographical
proximity have ceased to function, networks which by their nature cross
the geographical fault-lines that cause so much conflict in the world,
have to be a potential force for good.
I feel there is something valuable in this vision of de-centralised,
de-territoriarised networks of which the Syndicate/V2-East Network of
media professionals is a paragon [http://www.v2.nl/east/]. Crucially we
have yet to see anyone propose a workable alternative to these
networks, and that is the only thing which will move the debate along.
And yet, sometimes I stop myself and think. What kind of heart and body
is being produced by these new changes and new telecommunications? Must
I always be None of the Above? My passport says one thing, my face
another, my accent contradicts my eyes. Place of residence, final
destination, even EU nationality are not much easier to be filled in;
usually I just tick `other'. Beneath all the boxes where do we place
ourselves? How does one fix a moving object on a map? I am not an
exile, nor a refugee really, nor an immigrant; not de-racinated, I
think, any more than I am rooted. I have not felt the oppression of
war, nor found ostracism in the places where I do alight; I have
scarecely feel severed from a birth-home I have scarecely known lately.
Yet is a `citizen of the world' enough to comfort me or does it come
with an air of mediocrity as some media art festival mottos suggest?
Alienation, we are taught from kindergarten onwards, is the condition
of our time. This is the century of exiles & refugees, of boat people
and stateless. To understand the modern context, we are often told we
must read VS Naipaul, and see how people estranged from their cultures
mimic people estranged from their roots. Naipaul has got to symbolise
the definitive modern traveller not for his stamina, nor for his
bravado, nor for his love of exploration - it is his congenital
displacement. The strength of Naipaul is the poignancy of Naipaul: the
poignancy of a nowhere man, who tries to go home, but is not taken in,
and is accepted by another home only as long as he admits that he is a
lodger there.
There is however another way of apprehending foreignness, and that is
the way of Nabokov, of which I am more fond of in my land and
net-exploring operations. In Nabokov as well as in Roderick Buchanan's
recent Video Positive97 media project, called Notes on Pronunciation
[check http://www.fact.co.uk/VP97.htm we see the avid cultivation of
novelty: they both collect foreign worlds with a connosseur's delight.
They both see foreign words as toys to play with, and exile as the
state of kings. In Nabokov we can recognise an European's love for the
US rooted in the US's very youthfulness and restlessness; we can
recognise in him the sense that the newcomer's viewpoint may be the one
most conducive to bright enthusiasm. Unfamiliarity in any form, breeds
content.
Nabokov shows us that if nowhere is home, everywhere is. That instead
of taking alieniation as our natural state, we can feel partially
adjusted everywhere. That the outsider in the Festival/feast does not
have to sit in the corner alone, taking notes; they can plunge into the
pleasures of their new home with abandon. This is how I can make sense
of the keen ardour with which net artists cling to the once visited and
tested `promised' land of tomorrow which breeds such an array of
diverse scenarios for artistic difference. `I'd do it differently...
like this' and in doing so, the net.artist still reminds us of that
vast possibilities that arise from difference. Thus I can argue with
Roy Ascott and Lorry Anderson's vision of the net.artist as a
content/context provider but rather as a difference provider. For
instance the self-proclaimed director of the nowhere bound WWWArt
center, Alexei Shulgin [http://sunsite.cs.msu.su/wwwart] strikes a
different chord altogether with his project which introduces a cash
prize out of his pocket for the most generous of funders and sponsors
to be shortlisted in the arts on the net. Not to worry, Alexei's pocket
won't be deprived of a substantial amount soon though, I suppose, for
there are hardly any sponsors yet to fit in his category.
So we can go on circling the world sometimes using internet
communication and exploration as an itinerary defining tool in our
physical wandering around (refer to Heath Bunting - a great spokesman
for the homeless privileged for travelling tips on
http://www.irational.org) or to JODI [http://www.jodi.org] as the
paragons of vicarious travelling within internet for tips on how to get
your projects `promoted' and diverted from the still non-artists
friendly nowhereness, called internet, known also as an old junk car
park. And so we go on circling the world, well above the ground,
displaced from time, above the clouds, with all our needs attended to.
We disembark at airports, like in internet discussion groups, which are
both self-sufficient communities. At customs we have nothing to declare
but ourselves. But what price do we have to pay for all this?
Iliyana NEDKOVA, Sofia/Liverpool
[vr@fact.co.uk]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
work'n'stroll
illie_______________
@fact, liverpool, uk